Copyrights

The term copyright is like an elephant in the room which is ignored. While we are just as excited about your portraits and thrilled that you want to share them, there are still laws which protect artist rights. If we post them for you, please feel free to share, tag, like and brag. But, you must still follow the rules.

Webster’s defines copyright as:

“COPYRIGHT

: the exclusive legal right to reproduce, publish, sell, or distribute the matter and form of something (as a literary, musical, or artistic work)”

From Professional Photographers of America’s website:

“ “Copyright” describes the rights given to creators for their literary and artistic works. But we often don’t consider copyright when we look at our family photos or go to get them copied. Even though it is so easy to copy an image—with scanners, photo-quality printers, and copy stations—it is still illegal.

Things to remember about copyright:

Copyright is a property right.

Just because you buy a print does not mean you have purchased the copyright.

Professional photographers are the smallest of small copyright holders.

Under the Federal Copyright Act of 1976, photographs are protected by copyright from the moment of creation.

Photographers have the exclusive right to reproduce their photographs (right to control the making of copies).

Unless you have permission from the photographer, you can’t copy, distribute (no scanning and sending them to others), publicly display (no putting them online), or create derivative works from photographs.

A photographer can easily create over 20,000 separate pieces of intellectual property annually.

Professional photographers are dependent on their ability to control the reproduction of the photographs they create.

It affects their income and the livelihood of their families.

Even small levels of infringement—copying a photo without permission—can have a devastating impact on a photographer’s ability to make a living.

Copyright infringements—reproducing photos without permission—can result in civil and criminal penalties.”